Monday, January 14, 2019

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks - Week 2 - Challenge

Not quite sure what direction to take with this prompt. All of our genealogical research is a challenge. Of course, there are more extreme challenges with some of our ancestors than with others. One of my greater challenges was in finding the sister of my great-great grandfather Karl Wilhelm (Charles William) Pfeiffer.

The family story was that Charles and a sister, Barbara, came to the United States from Germany. The problem was, nobody knew anything else about Barbara!

In the summer of 2003, Ancestry.com had been adding newspapers to their databases.  It was accessible by paid subscription and I had access to this information as part of my subscription.  One day, while searching for anything related to the name of Pfeiffer, I ran across the obituary for Charles William Pfeiffer from 1907 in The Elyria Republican from Lorain County, OH.  The clues in the obituary sent me out on a whirlwind internet trail to find his sister, Barbara.





Clue Number 1:  The Obituary 

From The Elyria Republican, Elyria, OH 2 May 1907:

Charles William Pfeifer was born in Wurtemburg, Germany, August 13, 1832.  He, with his sister, Barbara, came to this country at the age of eighteen and landed in Cleveland, where he made his home for several years.  He was married to Sophia Rugger of Grafton, Ohio, May 28, 1859.  To them were born nine children and thirty grandchildren.  One son and grandson died in infancy; one granddaughter at the age of ten.  He moved to Grafton Ohio in March 1863, where he lived on his farm for forty-four years.  In the fall of 1896, he lost everything by fire and since then began to fail in health.  He was a member of the Belden Methodist Episcopal church for thirty years where he joined by letter.  He leaves a wife, six sons and two daughters and twenty-eight grandchildren, by whom he will always be missed.  A peculiar coincidence is to mention the death of his sister, Barbara March 14, and who was buried on the day of his death, March 16, 1907.  The funeral services were held in the M E church conducted by his pastor Rev. Thistle.

At the urging of my ever-present guiding forces, I went to the Cleveland Necrology Files at  http://www.cpl.org/LinksLibrary.  Having used this website before, it was only a hope and a prayer that I would find anything.  I only knew her first name – I had no clue what her last name was.  So, I entered the name Barbara.  Of course, there were many Barbara’s that came up.  The website allows you to sort by date, so I proceeded to do that.  Well, that certainly helped – only two Barbara’s came up for March of 1907.  One lived in Cleveland and one lived in Louisville, KY

Id#: 0041543
Name: Bucher, Barbara Ann
Date: March 12, 1907
Source: Source unknown;  Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #011.
Notes: Bucher-Barbara Ann, widow of the late Theodore and sister of Mrs. Frank Mack, entered into rest after a lingering illness, Saturday afternoon, aged 71 years. Funeral from her late residence, 7508 Carnegie ave. (416 E. Prospect, old no.), Tuesday at 10:30 a. m. Friends invited. Burial private. Canton and Akron papers please copy.

This Barbara’s ages does not match the time frames involved, nor are any of the names familiar.

Id#: 0177936
Name: Kerbel, Barbara
Date: March 20, 1907
Source: Source unknown; Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #044.
Notes: Kerbel-Barbara, entered into rest Thursday, March 14, 1907, at 4 a. m., aged 80 years, at son's residence, 404-1/2 E. Chestnut St., Louisville, Ky. Funeral Saturday morning from residence. Burial private. No Flowers.

Aha, a BARBARA aged 80 – well the age is right. Now that name, Kerbel  - where have I seen that name? It is so very familiar to me.

Clue Number 2:  An old photo

A few years ago, a cousin, Janice Pfeiffer Sprenkle, gave me a scrapbook of pictures and other information from her side of the family.  I had copied all the information and made my own scrapbook from that information.  There was a picture in that scrapbook of two people, in KY and on the back it said “cousins”.  I had no clue who these people were or where they belonged, or if they indeed were “cousins”.  But, as all genealogists know, no clue is too small or too big.

I got out the copy of the scrapbook and found the picture of LIZZIE AND CARL KERBEL of Louisville, KY.  Oh my gosh!  Can this be related to the Barbara in the obituary?  Is it possible I may have found her after 150 years?   Don’t let yourself get too excited; you have a lot to prove yet, I said to myself.



(On the back of this picture is written)
Cousin Lizzie Kerbel & son Carl
At their home in Louisville, KY  Sept 4, 1937
During the flood, water was 5-½ ft deep on street – government boats went up and down the street and took people supplies.  Was shut in for about 2 weeks.
My aunt, Norma Werner Kraps, had often said that her grandfather, my great-grandfather, Henry Pfeiffer, son of Charles William, made several trips to Kentucky to visit relatives in the 1930’s.  He would take the train, but she never knew whom he went to see or where he went.  I have seen pictures of Pfeiffers in a quarry type picture from Kentucky, but there was no identification otherwise to the picture.

Additional clues from the Internet:

I went to Ancestry.com to see what I could find on the surname of KERBEL.

1. Ancestry.com has a database of Kentucky death records.  In checking that out.  I found:

Kerbel, Carl F (This may be Barbara’s grandson), Volume: 61,Certificate:30421,
Death Date: 8 November 1971, Death Place: Jefferson, Age: 85. Residence: Jefferson

Kerbel, Charles J (Is this the son of Barbara), Volume: 5. Certificate: 2461
 January, 1929, Death Place: Jefferson, Age: 67, Residence: Jefferson
Kerbel, Elizabeth M (Is this Lizzie-Carl J’s wife?), Volume: 37, Certificate:18341
Death Date: 20 August, 1943, Death Place: Jefferson, Age: 082, Residence: Jefferson

Kerbel, Margaret   (Is this Carl F’s wife?), Volume: 18, Certificate: 8528, Death Date: 9 April, 1971
Death Place: Jefferson, Age: 67, Residence: Jefferson  

2.  In a family tree submitted to www.genealogy.com, there is a Carl Kerbel born about 1884, that married a Margaret Zurfluh and appeared to have married in Louisville, KY.  If I go back to the Kentucky Death Records, we see that a Margaret Kerbel died in 1971.

3.   Going back to the Cleveland Necrology files, I found:

Id#: 0177937 Name: Kerbel, C. Joseph
Date: Jan 23 1929
Source: Source unknown;  Cleveland Necrology File, Reel #044.
Notes: Kerbel-C. Joseph, at the residence, 1322 1st Street, Louisville, Ky., 10:15 Tuesday, morning, age 67years. Services at the chapel of Mass Bros., Louisville, Ky., Thursday, Jan 24, at 2 p. m.

This is definitely looking promising at this point.  Now, let me see if I can find a marriage license in Cuyahoga County for Barbara Pfeiffer. Many Probate Courts are adding information to their websites, and I knew that Cuyahoga County had an index of old marriages.

4.  By going to the Cuyahoga County Probate Court records (http://probate.cuyahogacounty.us/ml/pa.urd/mliw1000.display), I found the following:

PFEIFFER, BARBARA (Bride)     HINDERER, HEINREICH(Groom)
Vol. 9, Page 189, Line 44

This says that Barbara Pfeiffer and Heinreich Hinderer were married between 1810 and 1960.  Does this mean that Barbara was married to somebody else first? Another possible  mystery to solve?

Looking under the surname KERBEL, I found:

KERBEL, JOSEPH(Groom)         BRESSMAN, MARIA T(Bride)            Vol. 9, Page 189, Line 55

Since neither of these two marriage records showed the spouse that I was looking for, was I to believe that perhaps there was a second marriage for both?  Or perhaps, were the records not transcribed properly, as we note that both marriages are in the same volume and on the same page, only lines apart from each other.

5.  Meanwhile, in the LDS records at www.familysearch.org, I found:

KERBLE, Joseph married Barbara PFEIFFER on December 5, 1858 in Cuyahoga County.  This record is documented with  Batch No M514233 and   Source Call No 0877914 V. 6-9.  This record has been microfilmed from the original source.  Now, this seems more reliable.

6.  Now, on to the Census Records.

In looking at the 1860 Census for Ohio, in Cuyahoga Co.,  I found:  Charles Pfeifer age 28 – no occupation – born in Wuerttemburg, with Sophia age 24 also born in Wuerttemburg, and Frederick 3 months old born in Ohio.  But, I find no Barbara Pfeiffer or Barbara Kerbel.

I cannot locate Barbara’s family on the 1870 Census.
   
On the 1880 Census in Cuyahoga County we find:  KERPEL, Joseph, 54 Husband-Married-Laborer, born in Holland; his wife, Barbara age 53, born in Holland; son, Joseph age 19 born in OH; and son Frederick age 16 born in OH.

Now, the only problem with this is that it shows Barbara as being born in Holland as were her parents.  This is an error if this is the right family – and I am sure that it is.  It would also indicate that they were most likely living in Ohio up to this time.

On the 1900 Census from New York, New York County I found:

KERBEL, Charles J – Head , born April 1861 in OH, parents both born in Germany; Elizabeth, wife, born February 1861 Isle of Guernsey-as were her parents; son, Carl born Dec. 1885 in OH; daughter, Madaline born April 1888 in OH. Again, no Barbara Kerble is found        

Charles is a Stationary Engineer.  Elizabeth immigrated to the US in 1870 and has lived in the US for 30 years.  They rent a house at 677 E. 134th St.

In the 1920 Kentucky Census I found:  Kerbel, C. Joseph , Age:  58, Birthplace:  OH, County:  JEFFERSON, Locale:  6-WD; LOUISVILLE; 37-PCT;  Living at 1322 First – Louisville, KY;  KERBEL, C. Joseph – 58,       Mary E age 58 and Carl age 33.

The information from the 1900 Census matches as to birth locations.  It states that Carl at 33 is single.  It also states that Mary E immigrated in 1869 and is a Naturalized Citizen.  C. Joseph is an officer for a Consumer Co., and Carl is a foreman in a machine shop.

To this point, my internet search has taken about 2 hours.

7.  The next step would be to order copies of the death certificates from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.  I put off ordering the death certificates for various reasons until early in 2005.  I ordered the death certificates of Barbara’s son, Charles Joseph; Carl, his son; and Elizabeth Kerbel.

After speculating for almost 2 years, and waiting another 8 weeks for the death certificates, upon receipt of the death certificates, it indeed verified that Barbara Pfeiffer was the mother of Charles Joseph Kerbel.



Barbara was no longer lost to the family.  After 150 years, she was found. 

The next confirmation of this was from a book of records from the Emmanuel E & R Church in Valley City, Ohio compiled by Paul Hartman.  This church was established in 1838 and the index is for the years 1847-1920.  In 1869, this church was re-constructed and among the 40 members supporting this was Karl Pfeifer.

In looking through the index of this church record, I found that in 1860, the first son of Karl Wilhelm and Sophie Pfeiffer, Frederick, was born and baptized.  Barbara and Joseph Kerbl were the second and third godparents.  Sophia’s sister, Friederike, was the 4th godparent.  Sophie’s uncle, Paul Reutter (Ruegger) was the first godparent.  Another confirmation that Barbara married a Kerbl  (Kerbel) and was still in northeast Ohio.

As yet another confirmation that this is the correct Barbara Pfeiffer, in September, 2005 I found the following newspaper article from The Elyria Chronicle of March 20, 1907:

Mr. Will Pfeifer’s father died Saturday morning.  He and his sister came to this country from Germany some years ago and she lived in Louisville, KY.  She was buried Saturday, the date of his death.

There are still pieces of the puzzle missing, however.  What happened to Barbara’s grand-daughter, Madaline that appears on the 1900 Census?  What happened to Frederick Kerpel from the 1880 Census?  Where are Barbara and her family on other census records?  Those are still puzzles to solve another day.

So, never discard a photo, read the obituaries, scour the internet and have lots of patience!  You never know what you will find or where you will find it.  Perhaps even you can solve your family mysteries.

Margaret Lance Cheney
Originally written 17 September 2005
























































 



Saturday, January 12, 2019

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge: Week 1 - FIRST

I have had an interest in my family's history since I was in high school. My mother's sister had created an outline of their side of the family on their mother's side. It was mostly names and dates, but listed great-grandparents down to my generation. On my father's side, there had been a rough outline made that went back to my dad's great-great grandfather.

Through the years, my dad's parents always said they were probably 5th or 6th cousins. In 1998, I decided to find out exactly what that relationship was. In taking that step, it created many, many firsts for me.

My paternal grandparents, Flossie Elizabeth Wallington and Vernon Lance

I went to the Medina Library to start my research. I had no clue what I was looking for or even where to look for it. My grandparents were both born in Medina County so I felt that was the obvious place to look. I did find some books written by Sharon Kraynek Beachy that were newspapers snippits from different years. I was busily taking notes. I did not have a cell phone to take pictures. After awhile, a lady came in to the genealogy room and started pulling microfilm rolls. She knew what she was doing! Of course, we got to talking, and I told her I was researching the Lance and Halliwill/Halliwell names. She said, "Oh, there's lots of those around!" She gave me the names of 3 or 4 people to contact while we were talking. Before she left, she gave me her business card - she was Sharon Kraynek Beachy! I went home and started calling the names she had given me. Each one of them said, "But, you need to talk to the lady in Michigan." So, I called the lady in Michigan. Her husband was a Lance. She knew immediately who I was talking about and inquiring about. She asked if she could call me back in a few minutes because she had to get her 4 inch thick book. I said certainly.

Before she called me back, I knew back to my great-great grandparents on my dad's side. There was some uncertainty about my 2nd great grandmother's maiden name as she was listed as Sarah Lance in everyone's records. When Rosemary Lance called me back, within a very few minutes, she had me back to my 4th great-grandfather! I was in heaven. She then offered to send me the pages of the book that pertained to my family. And, within a few days they arrived in the mail. I was getting hooked in this thing called genealogy!

 One find lead to another find. Was I destined to be the next family historian? Information and pictures and other things seemed to flow to me. Within the first year, I obtained so many things that I felt like I needed to put an addition on the house for a museum.

My mother's grandmother's wedding nightgown

I finally decided that I needed to join a group that was involved in genealogy. I found the Lorain County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society which was local to me. I joined the group wanting to know that I was doing my genealogy the right way and to learn more about how to do it. Within the first year with this chapter, I was asked to be president. Hey, wait a minute - I'm new to this stuff, what do I know about being a president? After giving it some thought, I agreed. The first year was a real challenge for me. I did not like public speaking, my knees shook when I was in charge of the meetings, I could not eat on the day of a meeting. I had to make sure everything was just right. I served 2 terms (4 years) as president. By the end of that time, I could eat and even take a nap the afternoon before the meeting! I went on to serve another term as president and have served as their treasurer, and am currently their webmaster.

Meanwhile, I started working on my family in earnest. I had also become a member of the Medina Genealogical Society, in Medina, Ohio. They were just starting their lineage societies. I worked on my paperwork to be accepted. There were a few things I still had to learn. Donna Gruber was the lineage chair for the society. She was a certified genealogist and very detailed in what she expected. My main shortfall was a lack of source citations. I didn't know about them! Remember, I was still new to this. But, I sure learned in a hurry! I had the documents, but not necessarily the source information and I did a lot of backtracking to obtain that very information. It is now my priority to source anything I find so it saves me from the backtracking I had to do before.

Being involved with the Medina Genealogical Society, I was asked to be their president. I accepted. For awhile, I was president of both Lorain and Medina at the same time. Both chapters grew and prospered.

At the time I became president of the Lorain County Chapter, there was a representative from the Ohio Genealogical Society called a District Trustee. She was in charge of the Cleveland District encompassing 5 counties: Lorain, Medina, Cuyahoga, Ashtabula, and Lake. Her name was Jean Barnes. Jean was there from the beginning. She always said she thought she was going to have to scoop me off the floor during my very first meeting of being in charge. I think it came close.

As my friendship developed with Jean, she took me under her wing. Little did I know what she was actually grooming me for. She took me to other meetings within the Cleveland District. I learned so much from that experience. I met new people, I learned new things. Always learning. Ultimately, Jean was grooming me to replace her as the Cleveland District Trustee. The first step was become a Trustee for the Ohio Genealogical Society. Now, it is getting serious. Upon election as a trustee, I also was asked to be Membership Chair for the society. I agreed, but have to admit, I didn't accomplish much in that position. I changed to Education Chair. Much better. I joined other committees. My biggest joy was being on the planning committee for the building of the new Samuel D. Isaly Library of the Ohio Genealogical Society. How totally gratifying to see everything come together to create one of the finest genealogical libraries around. Eventually, I ran for first vice-president of OGS. I debated long and hard about running for president. I finally felt the time was right to do so and in 2014 I was sworn in to the office of president by Jean Barnes. It has been a humbling and gratifying experience. The horizons expanded beyond my expectations.

Another member of the board when I first joined was Susan Zacharias. Susan encouraged me to go to a FGS conference with her. We went to Springfield, IL for that illuminating experience. She introduced me to many of the national speakers and others involved in FGS. It was at this conference I met for the first time, George G. Morgan and Drew Smith. They ended up having supper with Sue and I one night and a life-long friendship has resulted.

George G. Morgan was the chair of the membership committee for FGS at that time. He asked me to serve. I did serve for about a year and a half. Thank you, George, for that opportunity.

I am currently the lineage chair for Lorain County. I am also the lineage chair for First Families of Ohio, where applicants have to prove their family was in Ohio prior to 1820. I created Century Families of Ohio for the Ohio Genealogical Society. For Lorain County, our family is the only family currently with 4 generations in their lineage groups. A very proud accomplishment.

But wait, let's go back to the beginning of this story. I wanted to find out the true relationship of my dad's parents, remember? It turns out that they were full 3rd cousins. The Lances and the Halliwills/Halliwells intertwined from the time of my 3rd great-grandparents. Each set of 4th great-grandparents had 12 children. They were neighbors. I actually have 3 sets of great-great grandparents that were 1st cousins. My 2nd great-grandfather, John Lance married his 1st cousin, Sarah Lance. So, her maiden name was her married name.

When I started on this journey, I said that I was on a path and I did not know where it was going to take me, but I was going to enjoy the journey. I have so enjoyed this journey. And, I have to really thank everyone that has a part in making it happen. I couldn't have done it without you! I am still following the path.